Sebelius to insurers: Make my day

The health-care story of the day is that insurers think they've found a way to get around getting around Congress's intent to ban preexisting condition discrimination for children. Details here. This afternoon, Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius sent a letter (pdf) to Karen Ignagni, head of the insurers trade association, saying, essentially, are you sure you want to try this?

In the letter, Sebelius says that she will issue regulations clarifying that the law says children cannot be denied access to their parents' plan and that the plan cannot exclude coverage for their preexisting conditions. "I urge you to share this information with your members," Sebelius says, "and to help ensure they cease any attempt to deny coverage to some of the youngest and most vulnerable Americans."

The politics -- and policy -- of this fight will be interesting. For the Republicans, this is a good issue in that it makes the bill look shoddily written. "If they can’t get these two things right," Sen. Mitch McConnell asked in his weekly radio address, "how can we expect them to properly manage the rest of it?"

Oddly, this is also a good issue for the Democrats. Why? Well, it lets them pick a fight with insurers who are trying to deny health-care coverage to sick little kids. Ignagni might as well kick an endangered puppy-panda hybrid in the face. On national television. While rooting for Duke to win the NCAA tournament.

The losers here are actually the insurers. As far as I can tell, their reading of the law is legitimate. And they have a lot to lose from a fight with the administration. It's not obvious that Sebelius actually can change this with a stroke of her pen, but there are plenty of other things she can do with a stroke of her pen that will make the insurance industry's life very, very difficult. And since this policy actually isn't a very big deal -- fairly few kids are uninsured because their preexisting conditions are keeping them off their parents' plan -- I'd guess that the administration and the insurers reach some sort of accord on this.

Related

The story so far: There's some ambiguity over whether the immediate ban on preexisting conditions discrimination for kids also required insurers to offer coverage to sick kids. Kathleen Sebelius, the secretary of health and human services, said she would write regulations clarifying that it did. Some thought that would work, some didn't.

A lot of folks have asked why the Affordable Care Act only eliminates preexisting condition discrimination in 2014. The basic answer is that in order to avoid an insurance death spiral, where costs rise because sick people rush into the system and healthy people rush out, you need to pair the end of health discrimination with a couple of other policies: The major pieces are guaranteed issue, so insurers also have to sell insurance to everyone; an individual mandate, so the risk pool includes both the healthy and the sick; and subsidies, so it's affordable for people to buy insurance.

Kathleen Sebelius is resigning as Secretary of Health and Human Services, AP is reporting. Sebelius' resignation comes just one week after the enrollment period for health plans under the Affordable Care Act comes to a close, which was marred with a technical glitches.

When Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius visited Tennessee on Friday for an outreach event on the Affordable Care Act, she received an unwelcome gift from a Republican state senator. Brian Kelsey, the state senator, presented Sebelius with a copy of "Websites for Dummies," a reference to the disastrous rollout of the federal health-insurance website, HealthCare.gov:

It was two and a half hours into her testimony before the House Energy and Commerce Committee on Wednesday when Secretary of Health and Human Services became so exasperated enough to answer repeated questions with a simple, "Whatever."

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius told health insurers risked losing consumers if they didn't work with the White House on a health care overhaul. But Karen Ignagni, the head of the insurance trade organization, said her group was eager to support an overhaul, just not this one.» E-Mail This » Add to Del.icio.us